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Synchronous grammars as tree transducers

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2004

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Stuart M. Shieber. Synchronous grammars as tree transducers. Proceedings of the Seventh International Workshop on Tree Adjoining Grammar and Related Formalisms (TAG+ 7), Vancouver, Canada, May 20-22 2004.

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Tree transducer formalisms were developed in the formal language theory community as generalizations of finite-state transducers from strings to trees. Independently, synchronous tree-substitution and -adjoining grammars arose in the computational linguistics community as a means to augment strictly syntactic formalisms to provide for parallel semantics. We present the first synthesis of these two independently developed approaches to specifying tree relations, unifying their respective literatures for the first time, by using the framework of bimorphisms as the generalizing formalism in which all can be embedded. The central result is that synchronous tree-substitution grammars are equivalent to bimorphisms where the component homomorphisms are linear and complete.

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computational linguistics, computer science, natural-language processing

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Synchronous grammars as tree transducers… : DASH Story 2013-03-11
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